19 Verbs to Use for the Word totality

On arriving at the works, Denis had possessed but one of the six shares which represented the totality of the property according to the agreement.

It denotes, according to him, the connected sum of the modes, the itself non-finite sum total of the finitethe universe meaning the totality of individual things in general (without reference to their nature as extended or cogitative); rest and motion, the totality of material being; the absolutely infinite understanding, the totality of spiritual being or the ideas.

The expression "The Many" [Greek: oi polloi] characterizes the empirical totality more correctly than the customary word "All."

If we combine the totality of the original Ideas into the unity of the person the concept of virtue arises.

The aggregate of these culture patterns, separately and often antagonistically matured, comprised a lesser totality called an empire and a larger totality called a civilization.

As we are here using the word, an experience is "real" which fits in with, and does not contradict the totality of our experiences; which does not falsify our calculation or betray our expectancy.

They form, however, a totality of arts, because the romantic type is the most concrete in itself.

To be most influential, it must be a consistent expression in all departments, giving the newspaper a totality of power in such aim.

Our inevitable evils and the abuses flowing from such a position are in his eyes monstrosities; a foreigner, a republican, and a Protestant, instead of being struck with the majestic totality of this harmony, he sees only the discordants, and he makes out of them a totality which he desires to have the pleasure and the distinction of reforming in order to obtain for himself the fame of a Solon or a Lycurgus.

The artist, according to this personal power of inspiration, should be able to portray a totality of superior and harmonious qualities, such as will oblige any competent observer to recognize it as beautiful.

The ballad and narrative poem must be, by reason of their highly artificial form, comparatively short, possessing totality, immediateness, compression, verisimilitude, and finality.

Charles V. also had to know what necessity was, and to submit to it, without renouncing the totality of his designs.

A thought, even when isolated, still senses the totality of relationship in the spirit; thus every thought in music is most intimately and inseparably related to the totality of harmony, which is unity.

In it the individual mingles with the mass, and becomes one with mankind, and mankind itself sums the totality of individual good in a well-nigh perfect way.

We may, indeed, term the totality of the given "phenomena," but this presupposes something which appears.

The Parliament followed up this strange retractation with a series of wise and far-sighted requests touching the totality of the public administration.

These are the two related looks that I have named Sensuality and Tenderness, for these reasons: The former of these glances is addressed exclusively to the form of its object; it caresses the periphery of it, and, the better to appreciate its totality, moves away from it.

If, then, the highest work of the greatest minds consists in nothing else than the recognition of an already existing order, there is no getting away from the conclusion that a paramount intelligence must be inherent in the Life-Principle, which manifests itself as this order; and thus we see that there must be a great cosmic intelligence underlying the totality of things.

This conception, which may be characterized as intellectualistic in its content, presents itself on its formal side as a quantitative way of looking at the world, which sacrifices all qualitative antitheses in order to arrange the totality of being and becoming in a single series with no distinctions but those of degree.

19 Verbs to Use for the Word  totality